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New York Post
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Post
Rebecca De Mornay slams 'Hand That Rocks the Cradle' remake: 'Betrayal'
Don't mess with Peyton Flanders. Rebecca De Mornay, the iconic actress who brought the deranged nanny to life in 'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle,' got candid on her feelings surrounding the film's reboot. The 1992 thriller is getting a facelift by 20th Century, with Michelle Garza Cervera helming as the director and 'Longlegs' star Maika Monroe, 32, portraying Flanders, the role made famous by De Mornay. 12 Rebecca De Mornay spoke to The Post about her new thriller, 'Saint Clare.' Page Six Despite the buzz surrounding the remake, the 'Risky Business' bombshell admitted she wasn't thrilled when she learned about the news, exclusively telling The Post that no one from the new cast or crew reached out to her about redoing the legendary film. 'Nobody. I found out about it, and I kind of joked that I was quite perturbed. It felt like a betrayal, like how dare you [have] somebody else be playing that part,' she said. That doesn't mean that De Mornay is boycotting the movie. 'I'm actually kind of curious to see it, to see if they can live up to what we did,' the actress added. While she's gearing up for her latest thriller 'Saint Clare,' which also features Bella Thorne and Ryan Phillippe, the star shared that remakes are sort of a moot point in Hollywood, despite classics 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' (1997) getting rebooted. 12 She also discussed 'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle' reboot. 12 Rebecca De Mornay played Peyton Flanders, the deranged nanny, in the '92 blockbuster. ©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 12 She told The Post that no one from the reboot reached out to her about the follow-up film. ©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection In June, Rob Lowe even revealed they are working on a script for a 'St. Elmo's Fire' remake 40 years after the original one hit theaters in 1985. 'New stories seem to be impossible for people to come up with. That's why I really like 'Saint Claire.' It's new. I haven't seen anything like it before,' De Mornay told The Post about her new horror film. 'There's a kind of laziness of falling [into] 'Oh, well, that works. So let's just do that one again,' rather than coming up with a new story. So that kind of bugs me a little,' she added, while noting that she enjoyed the various versions of 'A Star is Born.' 12 Maika Monroe is stepping into the role that De Mornay made famous. The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images 12 'I found out about it, and I kind of joked that it was quite perturbed. It felt like a betrayal, like how dare you, [have] somebody else be playing that part,' she said. Getty Images The musical romance has been remade four times since the original 1937 film. First, in 1951, there was a television adaptation featuring Kathleen Crowley and Conrad Nagel as the romantic leads. Three years later, Judy Garland and James Mason remade it for the big screen, followed by Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson in 1976, and, finally, Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper in 2018. 'We tend to think a movie is one cast. I guess it doesn't have to be, if it's a really good story, a good script. I guess, it doesn't have to, but I just wish that there was also more imagination with new scripts, because it feels like people are just falling back on what once were,' De Mornay told The Post. 12 The original 'Hand That Rocks the Cradle' was a hit with a $140 million box office haul. ©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 12 Rebecca De Mornay won her the Best Actress award at the 1992 Cognac Festival du Film Policier in France. ©Buena Vista Pictures/courtesy E When asked if she had advice for Monroe on playing the character that earned her a Best Actress award at the 1992 Cognac Festival du Film Policier in France — and two MTV award nominations for Best Villain and Best Female Performance — De Mornay shared that it's best for the young star to navigate the role without any influence. 'No, no, because as an actor, you have to come up with the thing yourself, even if it has been done before,' she replied. Referencing her 1988 portrayal of Billie Dawn in the stage version of 'Born Yesterday' at the Pasadena Playhouse, a role made famous by Judy Holliday in the original 1950 movie then by Melanie Griffith in the 1993 remake, De Mornay confessed, 'I, on purpose, didn't watch the movie before because I wanted to create character myself.' 12 Rebecca De Mornay as Peyton Flanders. ©Buena Vista Pictures/courtesy E De Mornay got her big break playing Lana in the 1983 blockbuster 'Risky Business' alongside Tom Cruise. The film followed the sexual adventures of Joel Goodson (Cruise), a high school senior who meets a call girl (De Mornay) while his parents are on vacation. The on-screen love interests started dating in real life after meeting on a different set in 1982, but their relationship fizzled out in 1985. In 1992, De Mornay was once again launched into international success in 'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle,' with the flick bringing in a whopping $140 million box office haul. 12 Rebecca De Mornay during her interview with The Post. Page Six The actress continued to star on the big screen in flicks like 1985's 'Runaway Train' with Jon Voight and 1991's 'Backdraft' with Kurt Russell. However, her chilling portrayal of the warped nanny in 'Hand That Rocks the Cradle' will always be remembered. The original flick focuses on an obstetrician and his pregnant wife (De Mornay), whose life crumbles when he's caught sexually molesting one of his patients. With his personal and professional life unraveling, he takes his life. 12 Annabella Sciorra and Rebecca De Mornay in 'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle.' ©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection The stress causes the wife to suffer a miscarriage. Posing as a nanny, she goes to great lengths to get revenge against the woman who came forward against her late husband and her family. Actor Martin Starr, who stars opposite Monroe in the upcoming remake, shared in March that they're already done shooting the follow-up film. During the interview with Collider, Starr confessed he wasn't sure if the movie would be released this year or in 2026. 12 Monroe's reboot has already wrapped filming but has no release date yet. Corbis via Getty Images 'I don't know when they're trying to push it,' he told the outlet. 'I know she's (Cervera) already editing it, so we're going.' De Mornay's latest film, directed by Mitzi Peirone, follows an isolated woman (Thorne) who suffers from dissociative identity disorder and is haunted by voices, which causes her to go on a killing spree in their small town. While she seems to be getting away with murder, her last kill exposes her to a world she's not ready for. De Mornay stars as Arlene 'Gigi' Newberry and Phillippe plays Detective Rich Timmons. 'Saint Clare' is available to stream on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Rebecca De Mornay Spills on Working with 'Tough Cookie' Bella Thorne In New Film, Saint Clare (Exclusive)
"I did not have to do a lot of research about what it's like to be an aging actress," De Mornay said of her role in the film -- before sharing why her plan to become a director "collapsed" in the '90s. Rebecca De Mornay is opening up about working with Bella Thorne in the new thriller Saint Clare, in which the Risky Business star plays an "aging actress." De Mornay appears in the film as Gigi, an ex-actress and grandmother to Thorne's Clare Bleeker, a sociopathic killer seeking vengeance for the missing women in her neighborhood. For De Mornay, getting into character was both easy in some aspects but a challenge in other ways. "I did not have to do a lot of research about what it's like to be an aging actress," De Mornay, 65, joked. "It was just too funny to be offered a movie where I'm playing an eccentric, ex-movie star," she said, "I thought, 'OK, this I can do.'" But the character of Gigi is more of a free-spirit, something De Mornay said is not the case for her. "To have that kind of freedom," she continued, "I'm just more thoughtful and more anxious than that," she laughed. "So that was sort of liberating to play," she then confessed. Playing a maternal figure to Thorne's Clare, De Mornay said it was her job to instill in her on-screen granddaughter that "We don't take s--t. You don't have to take it. We do our own thing, we live independently." "I had an immediate rapport with Bella. Sort of an unspoken thing," she said of working with the younger star. "There's a certain boldness, a certain defiance, a certain independence that we both have." "She's a tough cookie, you know? As am I," De Mornay continued. "I think we both really like to have fun, also. As soon as I got there we were taking selfie polaroids of each other, together, and it was just effortless – the connection." "But when we were shooting, she very much stayed in character of Clare with this suppressive secret and worries -- that she was carrying the whole film," she added. In addition to working with Thorne in the film, the movie serves as a reunion between the actress and Frank Whaley. The two starred on Outer Limits episode De Mornay also directed way back in 1995 -- with De Mornay recalling the encouragement Whaley gave her to become a director. "I was happy about that because I cast him in that 30 years ago and here he is again! So that was also another good sign," she said of the actor appearing in the film, despite them not sharing any scenes together. "I remember he said to me then, 'You've gotta direct again. You are really a director,'" she remembered from the '90s. "I was on that path, until I started throwing up and turned out I was pregnant with my first daughter," "And I written a script that I set up to direct and then I got it set up a second time and I started throwing up again and I was pregnant with my second daughter," she told TooFab. "And then the whole idea of directing collapsed for 20 years!" While that one Outer Limits episode remains her one directing credit, De Mornay has continued to work steadily in both film and television. Following her breakout role in Risky Business opposite Tom Cruise, she later starring in The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, The Shining miniseries, Wedding Crashers, American Reunion and, most recently, played Dorothy Walker on Jessica Jones. Saint Clare is available on demand now. Solve the daily Crossword


Express Tribune
20-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Express Tribune
Rebecca De Mornay reflects on relationship with 'Risky Business' co-star and ex Tom Cruise
Rebecca De Mornay is opening up about her former relationship with Tom Cruise, expressing admiration for the actor and their early days together. In a recent interview with Page Six while promoting her new thriller Saint Clare, the 65-year-old actress spoke warmly about Cruise, whom she dated for nearly three years after meeting on the set of Risky Business in 1982. 'I'm really, really proud of him,' De Mornay said, acknowledging Cruise's extraordinary rise to Hollywood superstardom. The 1983 film, which launched both of their careers, remains a cultural touchstone, and De Mornay credited Cruise's drive and vision even back then. 'He is a brilliant interpreter of the zeitgeist,' she added. 'We started this together and look what he did with it.' De Mornay reflected on their differences, likening Cruise to a 'major chord' and herself to a 'minor chord,' noting that his career path fulfilled what America wanted, while she pursued more unconventional and gritty roles after Risky Business. Her filmography includes Runaway Train, Backdraft, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, and a role in Marvel's Jessica Jones. Now, De Mornay appears in Saint Clare, a dark thriller starring Bella Thorne as a serial killer with a fixation on Joan of Arc. De Mornay said she was drawn to the project by its unique perspective. 'It's very rare that I read scripts about a female serial killer who's obsessed with Joan of Arc,' she explained. 'I just wanted to be a support to this project.' Despite the film's violent themes, she admitted she didn't initially associate it with real-life figures like Jeffrey Epstein. 'I never even thought of that… it's freaky that that would come into it,' she said.


The Guardian
17-07-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Poor Clare review – sassy spin on a medieval saint asks pithy questions
Chiara Atik's play about Saint Clare of Assisi and her friendship with the often more celebrated Saint Francis takes its lead from the Netflix school of sassy history. The cast have American accents and could be high-schoolers clicking their fingers, despite the period dress. The drama archly positions club-land beats and contemporary phraseology ('cool', 'totally' 'my social anxiety …') alongside choral sounds and medieval monasticism. It is light on historical detail, heavy on humour and attitude. So it makes sense to cast two Netflix stars in this very modern spin on the Italian saints: Clare is played by Arsema Thomas, known for her TV role in Queen Charlotte (the Bridgerton spin-off) while Shadow and Bone actor, Freddy Carter, is the priggishly earnest Francis. Atik's play, which won multiple awards in America, dramatises the conversion of Clare, an Italian noblewoman inspired by her friendship with Francis of Assisi to found an order following a rule of strict poverty. Here she is as kick-ass as they come, with an immaculate stage debut from Thomas, who plays the part straight up and sharp, despite the eyebrow-raised wit of the enterprise. But beneath the surface glibness there is lean, clever writing with short, sharp scenes and clean direction by Blanche McIntyre as the play travels towards its serious preoccupations with wealth, poverty and inequality. Clare, with her order of Poor Ladies, was anything but poor at the outset. She renounced all her wealth after meeting Francis and embraced radical poverty (her order, until recently, were still instructed to walk barefoot). Francis, meanwhile, is mocked, gently, as a young man rebelling against his silk merchant father. He slowly becomes more moderate, it seems, and Clare all the more radical. The unfussy, single statement set (a bed, a chair, a bare tiled floor) is designed by Eleanor Bull, who also dreams up some gorgeously regal period costumes. It is suffused in warm, pointed light by Oliver Fenwick. There are some great scenes of bristling sisterhood between Clare and younger sis, Beatrice (Anushka Chakravarti, cutely brattish), as well as gossiping sessions between Clare and her two lady's maids (Liz Kettle and Jacoba Williams). 'Can you spare any change, please?' says a beggar who Clare and Beatrice mistake for a heap of rubbish. This hammers home the fact that this is both about 13th-century poverty and our own. But there is potency in the heavy-handedness: the play is not trying to hide the fact that inequality then is recognisable, and unchanged, today. There are intelligent conversations about it that resonates loudly for today – Francis speaks of how the rich must necessarily turn a blind eye to poverty because it implicates them, by its existence. The ending speaks of the modern world and all the ways in which the gulf between rich and poor is shored up. It should jar but instead leaves you prickled, roused, impressed by the singularity of Clare's resolve – and awkwardly implicated yourself. At Orange Tree theatre, London, until 9 August


Geek Tyrant
25-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Geek Tyrant
Trailer For Ryan Phillippe and Bella Thorne's Small Town Thriller SAINT CLARE — GeekTyrant
Quiver has released the traile for a small town thriller titled Saint Clare , which stars Bella Thorne and Ryan Phillippe. In a small town 'a solitary woman named Clare Bleecker (Thorne) is haunted by voices that lead her to assassinate ill intended people and get away with it, until her last kill sucks her down a rabbit hole riddled with corruption, trafficking and visions from the beyond.' Clare is an average Catholic high school student who lives with her grandparents after being orphaned. She seems normal, but Clare will do whatever it takes to protect loved ones when confronted by the evil she faces in her small town. The movie is adapted from the Clare at Sixteen novel series written by Don Roff. It was directed by Mitzi Peirone and also stars Rebecca DeMornay, Frank Whaley, Bart Johnson, Erica Dasher, and more. Saint Clare will be released in select theaters and on VOD starting July 18th, 2025.